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This research discusses the concept of smart specialisation, evidence-based priority setting, and the link between innovation and regional growth. It also provides a case study of the West Midlands region in the UK and outlines key steps for developing a RIS3.
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Research and Innovation Strategies for Smart Specialisation (RIS3) John Edwards EuropeanCommission SmartSpecialisationPlatform Casa Mateus, 19th May 2012
Evidence-based All assets are considered No top-down decision, but entrepreneurial discovery process involving key stakeholders Global perspective on potential competitive advantage and potential for cooperation Sourcing knowledge rather than re-inventing the wheel What is Smart Specialisation? • Priority setting in times of scarce resources • Excel / Improve in something specific • Focus investments on regional comparative advantage • Accumulation of critical mass • Not necessarily focus on a single sector “Build on the past whilst breaking with it”
Where did Smart Specialisation come from? • Knowledge for Growth Expert Growth: D. Foray, B. van Ark • Transatlancticproductivity gap • KETs and the “ValleyofDeath” • “Most advanced regions invest in the invention of general purpose technologies,others invest in the co-invention of applications of the generic technology in one or several important domains of the regional economy” (Foray 2010) • Place based dimension: P. McCann, R. Ortega-Argilés • Embededness, relatedvariety and connectivity • Political support from the European Union: • EU budget review • Europe 2020 • Reform of Cohesion Policy and the RIS3 conditionality
Is there a link between innovation and regional growth?“The general consensus…is that the driving force behind long-term economic growth is science, technology and innovation in its different forms and facets” (OECD 2011: Regions and Innovation Policy) Source: Mikel Navarro et al, Basque Competitiveness Institute 2010. "Until the 1980s, technology and innovation were under recognised influences in the explanation of differences in the rates of economic growth between regions in advanced industrial nations..."(Townroe)
What is a RIS3? Buildingon the past • Widespread experience of national/regional innovation strategies in the framework of the EU Cohesion Policy • Achieved greater co-operation among private and public stakeholders and better communication between technology providers and clients Breaking with the past • Lack of international and trans-regional perspective • Not in tune with the industrial and economic fabric of regions • Too narrow vision of innovation • Picking the winner syndrome • The best performing regions were just copied
Case Study: West Midlands (UK) • Technological and skills diversification, innovation, supply-chain upgrading • Automotive industry (dominant sector in the region) • To increased local job retention; movement away from traditional automotive supplies; new product and service innovations; technological and skills upgrading. • Main pillars of the strategy: • Enhanced business support services: manufacturing advisory service, grant funding for strategically important companies, networked R&D centres of excellence • Skills-training services: graduate intershipprogramme and retail support programme • A regional communication campaign: comprising data, intelligence gathering and provision service,
The RIS3 Guide Edited by JRC IPTS in association with DG REGIO and with contributions from: • D. Foray, P. McCann, J. Goddard, K. Morgan, C. Nauwelaers, R. Ortega • Commission officials from various DGs • S3 Platform research team Available on the S3 Platform webpage! http://s3platform.jrc.ec.europa.eu
Key steps for developing a RIS3 Step 1 – Analysis of regional context/potential Step 2 – Governance Step 3 – Vision for the future Step 4 – Selection of priorities Step 5 – Policy mix Step 6 – Monitoring and evaluation
Key to success:Governance and framework conditions • Capacities and capabilities can influence strategy formation and • implementation • Priority setting and avoidance of capture by interest groups • Institutional arrangements to facilitate process of entrepreneurial • discovery (soft and hard institutions; some easier to change than • others) • Problemof cross cruttingcompetences for innovationpolicy • Relationshipbetweennational and regional innovationsystems
The S3 Platform – here to help you innovate too! http://s3platform.jrc.ec.europa.eu JRC-IPTS-S3PLATFORM@ec.europa.eu